Clicking my way through incomprehensible questions, however, I discover that if I want a webpage removed I should go directly to the site's webmaster. For those not in the know, Google helpfully explains that a webmaster is someone who controls the content on websites - not, as I'd suspected, a megalomaniac who runs the internet.
Watch - European Court: Google must yield on info
Disappointed with this response, I tick a box telling Google that the overlord has been unresponsive to my request. Google then asks me what I want removed and provides a list of options: a picture, contact details, a government-issued ID number, bank details, a photograph of my signature, inaccurate information about myself, and so on.
I choose "picture" and come up against another brick wall. The reply tells me there's very little that Google remove from search results "on a discretionary basis". Requests to remove contact details and inaccurate information yield the same response. Apparently, the search engine won't remove webpages on the whims of silly girls who want to bury bad photos of themselves.
Requests to delete ID numbers, bank details, and signatures are treated with a little more consideration. Again, I'm told to contact the webmaster, but this time Google asks me to provide more information and I send a form off into the ether.
I try a different approach next, calling the Google press office to see if they can help. I'm directed back to the support page and again told to contact the webmaster of the page I want removed. However, they explain that as the search engine is an index of all of the webpages on the internet, they can in theory remove pages from their results, but it's better to approach a webmaster who can get the content removed altogether. After all, a page removed from Google's results can still be found through another engine, such as Bing or Yahoo.
"People make the mistake of thinking that Google is the internet, which is flattering but inaccurate," says a Google spokesperson. "Even if Google was to take down content, if you went to another search engine you would find it there."
The issues of censorship and privacy remain, but according to Google it is not they but the webmasters who hold the real power.
- The Independent